IÂ leveled a cool stare at the man sitting across from me.
After yesterdayâs CEO bombshell and my unsettling interaction with Isabella, Iâd hoped for a smooth day at work, but those hopes spiraled down the drain the minute Tobias Foster showed up unannounced.
He wore a shiny new Zegna suit, an even shinier Rolex, and a smug smirk as he inspected his surroundings.
âNice office,â he said. âVery fitting for a Young.â
He didnât say it, but I could read between the lines.
Which was complete bull. I may be a Young, but Iâd worked my way up from the bottom like every other employee.
âIâm sure yours is equally nice.â I gave him a cordial smile and glanced at my watch. Heâd catch the movement; hopefully, he would take a hint as well. âWhat can I do for you, Tobias?â
He was the head of the Young Corporationâs Europe division and my biggest competition for CEO, so Iâd made an exception to my no-unscheduled-meetings rule and invited him into my office.
I already regretted it.
Tobias was the worst sort of employeeâgood at his job but so crass and irritating I wished he werenât so we could fire him. I appreciated his competence, but he was one step away from sticking his foot so far down his mouth even the worldâs most talented surgeon couldnât retrieve it.
âI just wanted to drop by and say hi. Pay my respects.â Tobias fiddled with the crystal paperweight on my desk. âIâm in town for a bunch of meetings. Iâm sure you know about them. The Europe division is expanding so fast, and Richard invited me to dinner at Peter Luger.â His laugh grated through the air.
Richard Chu was the Young Corporationâs longest-serving board member and a dinosaur when it came to innovation. Weâd butted heads multiple times over the future of the company, but no matter how much power he thought he wielded, he was only one vote out of many.
âIâm not surprised. Richard does enjoy a certain type of company.â
. Tobiasâs smile slipped. âPerhaps you should get going. Traffic can be quite brutal at this time of day. Would you like me to call a car for you?â
My hand hovered over the phone in a clear dismissal.
âNo need.â He released the paperweight and pinned with me a hard stare, all traces of fake deference gone. âIâm used to doing things for myself. But life must be a lot easier for you, huh? All you have to do is not fuck up for the next four months and the CEO role is yours.â
I didnât take the bait. Tobias could talk shit all he wanted, but I was damn good at my job and we both knew it.
âI havenât fucked up in over thirty years,â I said pleasantly. âI donât plan on starting now.â
His phony affability slid back into place like a curtain falling over a window. âTrue, but thereâs a first time for everything.â He stood, his smile oilier than a fast-food kitchen. âSee you at the exec retreat in a few weeks. And Kai? May the best man win.â
I returned his smile with an indifferent one of my own. Lucky for me, I always won.
After Tobias left, I reviewed the last quarterâs financial reports for the second time. Print revenue down eleven percent, online revenue up nine point two percent. Not great, but it was better than the other divisions, and it wouldâve been worse had I not doubled down on the shift to digital despite the boardâs protests.
A sharp ring tore my attention away from the reports.
I groaned when I saw the caller ID. My mother only interrupted my office hours to share urgent or unpleasant news.
âI have excellent news.â As usual, she cut straight to the chase when I picked up. âClarissa is moving to New York.â
I flipped through my mental Rolodex. âClarissaâ¦â
âTeo.â The clack of heels against marble emphasized her impatience. âYou grew up with her. How could you forget?â
Clarissa Teo.
A vague impression of pink tulle and braces passed in front of my mindâs eye. I suppressed another groan. âSheâs five years younger than me, Mother.
isnât quite accurate.â
The Teos owned one of the biggest retail chains in the UK. My mother was best friends with Philippa Teo, and our family mansions stood side by side in Londonâs posh Kensington Palace Gardens.
âYou were neighbors and attended the same social functions,â my mother said. âIt counts in my book. Regardless, arenât you thrilled sheâs moving to Manhattan?â
âHmm.â My noncommittal answer contained all the enthusiasm of a defendant sitting trial.
Despite our familiesâ closeness, I barely knew Clarissa. I hadnât been interested in hanging out with a girl five years my junior as a kid, and an ocean separated us when we were both adultsâIâd studied at Cambridge for my masterâs while sheâd attended Harvard. By the time she returned to London, Iâd already moved to New York.
We certainly werenât close enough for me to feel any type of way over her comings and goings.
âShe doesnât know many people in New York,â my mother said with the subtlety of a thousand neon sparklers spelling at night. âYou should show her around. The Valhalla Clubâs fall gala is coming up. She would make a lovely date.â
A sigh traveled up my throat to the tip of my tongue before I swallowed it. âIâm happy to take her out to lunch one day, but I havenât decided whether Iâm bringing a date to the gala yet.â
âYou are a Young.â My motherâs voice grew stern. âNot only that, you could become CEO of the worldâs biggest media company in four months. Iâve let you have your fun, but you to settle down soon. The board does not look favorably on people with unsettled home lives.â
âDidnât one of the board members find his wife in bed with the gardener? A married home life sounds more unsettled than an unmarried one.â
I rubbed a hand over my mouth, wondering how my smooth, easy day had devolved into . First Tobias, now my mother. It was like the universe was conspiring against me.
âIâm not asking you to propose, though it certainly wouldnât hurt,â my mother said. âClarissa is beautiful, well-educated, well-mannered, and cultured. She would make a wonderful wife.â
âThis isnât a dating app. You donât need to list her qualities,â I said dryly. âLike I said, I promise Iâll meet up with her at least once.â
After a few more reassurances, I hung up.
A headache throbbed behind my temple. My mother gave me the illusion of choice, but she expected me to marry Clarissa one day.
did. If not Clarissa, then someone exactly like her with the proper lineage, education, and upbringing.
Iâd dated multiple women like that. They were pleasant enough, but there was always something missing.
Another image flashed through my mind, this time of purple-black hair and sparkling eyes and a husky, irrepressible laugh.
My shoulders tightened. I pushed the image out of my mind and tried to refocus on work, but glints of purple kept resurfacing until I slammed my folder shut and stood.
Perhaps my mother was right. I take Clarissa to the fall gala. Just because my previous girlfriends hadnât worked out didnât mean a similar relationship wouldnât work out in the future.
I was destined to marry someone like Clarissa Teo.
Not anyone else.
âWho the hell pissed you off today?â Dante rubbed his jaw. âYou were throwing punches at me like I was Victor fucking Black.â
âCanât handle it?â I quipped, sidestepping his question. I ignored the mention of a rival media groupâs smarmy CEO. âIf marriage made you soft, let me know, and Iâll find a new partner.â
His glare couldâve melted the marble columns lining the hallway.
I suppressed a smile. Riling him up was even more therapeutic than our weekly boxing matches. I just wish he didnât make it so easy. One semi-critical mention of his wife or marriage and he reverted right back to his scowling, pre-Vivian self.
We typically boxed on Thursdays, but Iâd convinced him to move our standing appointment up given yesterdayâs CEO vote bombshell.
âBe my guest. Iâd much rather spend my evenings with Viv anyway.â A short pause. âAnd Iâm not fucking soft. We ended in a tie.â
We usually did. It galled my competitive side to no end, but it was also why I enjoyed sparring with Dante so much. It was a challenge in a world filled with easy wins.
âHoneymoon stage is still going strong then?â I asked.
Dante and Vivian had recently returned from their actual honeymoon in Greece. The Dante Iâd known for the better part of a decade wouldâve never taken two weeks off from work, but his wife had accomplished the impossible. Sheâd transformed him into an actual human being with a life outside the office.
His face softened. âDonât think itâll ever end,â he said with surprising frankness. âSpeaking of which, what are you going to do about Clarissa?â
Iâd told him about the CEO vote and my motherâs call earlier. As expected, Dante had displayed the sympathy of a chipped boulder, but he never missed an opportunity to hound me about my motherâs determination to marry me off.
âTake her out like I promised. Who knows?â I stopped at the entrance to the bar. âShe could be the one. This time next month, we could be double dating and wearing matching couplesâ outfits in Times Square.â
Dante grimaced. âIâd rather cut off my arm and feed it through a grinder.â
I swallowed my laughter. âIf you say so.â If I convinced Vivian, she could get him to yodel naked on the corner of Broadway and Forty-Second Street. Luckily for him, I also found the idea of couplesâ outfits and visiting Times Square abhorrent.
We usually grabbed a drink together after our boxing matches, but he excused himself tonight for a date with his wife, so I entered the bar alone.
I wove through the room, instinctively searching for a glimpse of dimples and violet, but I only saw Isabellaâs blond friend and another bartender with red curls.
I settled at an empty stool and ordered my usual scotch, neat, from the blond. Teresa? Teagan?
. That was her name.
âHere you go!â she chirped, setting the drink in front of me.
âThank you.â I took a casual sip. âBusy night. Is anyone else working today?â
âNope. We never have more than two people working the same shift.â Tessaâs brows rose. âAre you looking for someone in particular?â
I shook my head. âJust asking.â
Luckily, another customer soon diverted her attention, and she didnât press further.
I finished my scotch and spent the next half hour engaging in the obligatory networking and information gatheringâthere was nothing like a little alcohol to loosen peopleâs tongues, which was why I had a strict three-drink limit in publicâbut I couldnât focus. My thoughts kept straying to a certain room on the second floor.
Not because of Isabella, obviously. I was simply bothered by how sheâd outperformed me, and I couldnât rest until Iâd perfected the piece.
I lasted another ten minutes in the bar before I couldnât take it anymore. I excused myself from a conversation with the CEO of a private equity firm, slipped out the side entrance, and took the stairs to the second floor.
Unlike yesterday, no music leaked into the hall. A brush of what felt perilously close to disappointment skimmed my skin until I shook it off.
I reached for the door right as it swung open.
Somethingâ
âsmall and soft slammed into me, and I instinctively reached an arm around her waist to steady her.
I looked down, the scent of rose and vanilla clouding my senses before my brain registered who was in my arms.
Silky dark hair. Tanned skin. Huge brown eyes that melded to mine with surprise and something else that sent an alarming rush of heat through my blood.